An open-ended tool to compose movies for cross-cultural digital storytelling: Textable Movie Vaucelle C; Davenport G August 2004
Abstract This paper presents Textable Movie, an open-ended tool that allows any
storyteller to become "video-jockey" able to improvise a media story in
real-time drawing from an available collection of annotated images and
videos. In the framework of digital storytelling, Textable Movie
promotes the idea of maker controlled media and can be contrasted to
automatic presentation systems. Its graphical interface takes text as
input and allows users to improvise a movie in real-time based on the
content of what they are writing. Media segments are selected
according to how the users label their personal audio and video
database. As the user types in a story, the media segments appear on the
screen, connecting writers to their past experiences and inviting further
story-telling. Video Jockeys perform using their own or someone else’s video database presenting different visual perspectives on the same
story. By co-creating movie stories that are first improvised from a
personal video database and then projected into someone else’s video
database as two tellers merge their stories, young adults are challenged
in their beliefs about other communities. In this paper we will present
our ongoing research on a future tangible version of Textable Movie for
a direct control and visualization of multiple point of views.
In Proceedings of ICHIM 04 "Digital Culture & Heritage", Berlin, Germany, August 30-Sept 2004 http://mf.media.mit.edu/pubs/conference/TextableMovieFull.pdf |